t '""WttyM. HW'-'WW' n' b" - mm Commoner Ithe WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR VOL 21 NO. 10. Make Reserve Board Representative It took a good while to get Agriculture, Labor and Commerce represented in the President's cabinet. Those threo great groups were not rep resented until within forty years. A Secretary of Agriculture was provided for something more than thirty years ago, then a Secretary of Com merce, then a Secretary of Labor. These three groups ought to be represented on the Federal Reserve Board. That board, by regulating- the currency, exerts a large influence on the farmer, the laborer, and the business man. The Reserve Board deflated the farmer; it is largely responsible for the sudden drop of nearly one-half jn farm prices. Indeed, this drop now stands "in the way- of returning pros perity. No farmer Md a voice in the decision that so affected his welfare. Why not have as one of the Directors of the Reserve Board. a PARMER who actually FARMS and is, therefore, in sympathy .with-agriculture,? If th:6t&rvkef(ip,nti'ot buy, the manufacturers can not keep their mills going, and when the mills close down labor is thrown out of employ ment. The Federal Reserve Board is, therefore, largely responsible for the present industrial condition. Why not have as a Director on the Federal Reserve Board a LABORER who LA BORS and, therefore, is in sympathy with the wage-earners? The third group in size and importance is the business man not the banker who assumes to speak for the business man, but the business man who, instead of being a banker himself, is a patron of the bank and is, therefore, an acute sufferer if the Reserve Board contracts the cur-, rency. Why not have as a Director on the Re serve Board a BUSINESS MAN who it NOT a banker but a man in sympathy with the busi ness men of the country? ' What logical objection can there be to such a reorganization of the Federal Reserve Board as will make it impossible for lawyers, bankers, and college professors to have entire control of It? Surely the farmer', the laborer, and the business men who constitute at least three fourths of the entire country ought to have a voice in the control of our currency system , which so vitally concerns each man, woman and child in the nation. W. J. BRYAN. . MARCHING TOWARD MONOPOLY The propose'd merger of all the railroads into nineteen great systems is only a step toward gigantic private monopoly, compared with which other private monopolies will seem like infants. Then there will be but one issue before the counr try, viz., whether the government will own the railroads or the railroads own the government. IAY ON, M'DUFF Henry Ford announces a drive for clean, poli tics. "Lay pn;McDuff;".'The Commoner tyttl he the last to "cry,: hold, enough ! " Lincoln, Nebraska, October, 1921 Whole Number 750 . ti STARTLING FACTS "The records of the Internal Revenue Bureau show that corporations of the United States have made net profits amounting to $47,000,000,000 during the past five years. After paying taxes of all sorts, there is left n&t profits of $38,000, 000,000. Fo,ur-fifths of this amount was made by less than 10,000 corporations, and more than $19,000,000,000 was made by about 1,000 corporations such as the Steel Trust, Du Pont companies, Standard Oil, Bethlehem Steel, and others. These corporations, numbering only abou(L0,? 000 out of a total of 317,000 in the United States, are paying more than half of our excess profits taxes. So it will be seen that these big corporations that took adr vantage of the Nation while its life was jeopardized by war and profiteered to the extent of billions and billions, are the chief beneficiaries of a tax bill which gentle men have the effrontery to declare is a measure affording the people relief from War taxes." ' The above is an extract from a forceful speech by Congressman Henry B. Steagall of Alabama, before the House of Represen t,ativ.es.Jn which he laid bare the iniquities Oif the proposed Republican tax revision program. The speech, which is reproduced in another part of this issue, should bo read and re-read, and then passed on to your neighbor. PROGRESSIVE REPUBLICANS AT WORK Press dispatches indicate that thd progres sive Republicans of the Senate are gettiiig busy. Whether they are acting on their own initiative, 1 or are stirred to activity by the amendments proposed by the Democrats of the Senate, may be a matter of conjecture, but that they are moving along Democratic lines is certain. They propose to restore the higher rates on. higher incomes that is right; and they propose an in crease in the inheritance on large fortunes Why not? They will find all the progressive Demo crats voting with them. Why not let the excess profits ta stand? No platform demanded its repeal; it is only pres sure brought by big business. Let the excess profits; tax remain: it measures the amount of exploitation going on in the country, f W. J. BRAN. '-' PROTECTING TENANTS On another page will be found a New York, dispatch which tells how Mr. Untermyer is pro tecting the tenants against extortionate rents. A few big lawyers like Untermyer would change Che situation in a short time, but most of them seem to be retained on the other side. i" An Aid to Disarm-ament While- disarmament in itself, is desirable, we" -can hardly hope, to make much progress at Jt unless at the same time we can provide a tri bunal for the settlement of questions that have heretofore been settled upon the . battlefield. While the administration is hostile to the League of Nations, it will be remembered that none o the objectors to the covenant found fault with the provision taken from the thirty American treaties, providing for the investigation of ALL disputes before resort to war. This plan, if in force throughout the world, would make war al most impossible. The plan, accompanied by dis armament, would make war a thing of the past. It is to be hoped that the two remedies can be adapted at the same time, for each clearly aids the other. Treaties providing for investigation are less likely to be violated when armies and, navies are reduced to a minimum, and the' treaty. ; plan makes it! possible for the armies- and ,nayje to be reduced to a mjnmum. - V1 '?''' W. J. BRYAN.' " '- TOO FAST AND TOO SLOW ti The rules of the House of Representatives at . Washington permit the House to move too rapid , ly and the rules pf the Senate permit unneces sary delay. The House rules should permit , amendments and roll calls on amendments. Tbo Revenue bjll, raising several billions of dollars, was forced through with but one opportunity giyen the minority for amendment. That stifles the minority and permits the majority to escape responsibility. A majority of the majority con trols and the minority of the majority party Is compelled to- acquiesce or join the opposition. In the Senate, on the contrary, the minority has too much power. In the Senate the rules should be so amended; as to allow the majority to close the debate after a reasonatyie tlmje, and , In the House the rules should be so changed as to allow, the minority to require a separate vote on amendments to at least a reasonable ex tent. W. J, BRYAN. HEARING FROM THE COUNTRY , The New York Times lectures the finance com mittee of the Senate for being influenced by "let ters, petitions, telegrams and other appeals" from the country against the retroactive pro visions of the revenue bill. It calls attention to the "formal and public declaration of the thou sands of manufacturers," which seems to have" been ignored. The masses jiavo VOTES and votes compel respect. Watch them next year. FREWE'N ON SILVER. r " , . 'Kr The readers of The Commoner wHl be interr estod to read oh another page Moreton Fireweh'ii: comment on the silver situation in 1894 and to-, day. Mr. Frewen is an authority on internationr al finances. -" '... ' WETS WEAKENING ?.,' In 1919 the wets of Brooklyn were quite , hi " j larious over the great victory won by Judge Has . kell on a wet platform. This year he polled about V one-sixth of the Republican vote for mayor and the wets are busy explaining. The weta are -weakening. '. t-y I '41 M t rf 'U t ill 'kiAaMkLu.s&.-